Hē Kainē Diathēkē. The Greek Testament, with Engl. notes, critical, philological [&c.] by S.T. Bloomfield, Volume 1

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1832
 

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Page 455 - Being therefore a prophet, and knowing that God had sworn with an oath to him, that of the fruit of his loins...
Page 121 - Then led they Jesus from Caiaphas unto the hall of judgment: and it was early; and they themselves went not into the judgment hall, lest they should be defiled; but that they might eat the passover.
Page 16 - But when I find mention made of the number of demons in particular possessions, their actions so expressly distinguished from those of the man possessed, conversations held by the former in regard to the disposal of them after their expulsion, and accounts given how they were actually disposed of ; when I find desires and passions ascribed peculiarly to them, and similitudes takenjfrom the conduct which they usually observe ; it is impossible for me to deny their existence...
Page 21 - deny thyself what is even the most desirable and alluring, and seems the most necessary, when the sacrifice is demanded by the good of thy soul.' Some think that there is an allusion to the amputation of diseased members of the body, to prevent the spread of any disorder.
Page 111 - ... &c.; so, in like manner, the holy prophets call kings and empires, by the names of the heavenly luminaries ; their misfortunes and overthrow are represented by eclipses and extinction...
Page 132 - And they took the thirty pieces of silver, the price of him on whom a price had been set by some of the sons of Israel, and they gave them for the potter's field, as the Lord directed me.
Page 107 - Saviour foretells, in the clearest manner, the signs of his coming, and the destruction of Jerusalem. He then passes on to the other part of the question, concerning the time of his coming. History is the only certain interpreter of prophecy ; and by a comparison of the two, we shall see with what stupendous accuracy the latter has been accomplished.
Page x - The TEXT has been formed (after long and repeated examinations of the whole of the New Testament for that purpose solely) on the basis of the last Edition of R. Stephens, adopted by Mill...
Page 349 - I think the water of this pool acquired a medicinal property from the mud at its bottom, which was heavy with metallic salts, — sulphur perhaps, or alum, or nitre. Now this would, from the water being perturbed from the bottom by some natural cause, perhaps subterranean heat, or storms, rise...
Page 98 - Hales, in his analysis of chronology, " here baffles the malignant proposers of the question, by taking advantage of their own concession, that the denarius bore the emperor's image and superscription ; and, also, of the determination of their own schools, that, wherever any king's coin was current, it was a proof of that country's subjection, to his government.

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